To link to the entire object, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed the entire object, paste this HTML in websiteTo link to this page, paste this link in email, IM or documentTo embed this page, paste this HTML in website

Chicago examiner prirf onf cent deliverc y carrier rim^e uiic v_,cim 30 cent per month saturday june 27 1908 18 pages vol vi no 162 a m cleveland interred simply poem his only eulogy no music nor csre'mony at last rites over ex-presi dent at princeton family hides its grief children follow mother's ex ample but president roose velt shows emotion poem used as eulogy the nearest approach to a eulogy at the funeral of grover cleveland was the reading of wadsworth's poem the happy warrior by dr van dyke in part as follows who is the happy voarriurf who is he who every man in arms would wish to be who doomed to go in company with pain and fear and bloodshed â€” misera ble train turns his necessity to glorious gain controls them and subdues trans mules bereaves of their bad influence and their 0uod receives bu ishv if he be called upon to face some awful moment 1o ichicii heaven has joined great issues good or bad for man kind is happy as a lover a';id through the heat of conflict keeps the law in calmness made and sees what he foresaw whom neither shape or danger can dismay ivor thought of tender happiness beiroii new york june 2d with simplicitj fitting his liunl life role of a country gentle man grover cleveland who for eight year was president of the united states wa buried at 6 o'clock this evening in an un pretentious cemetery at frincetou n j from the time services began at west land until the body was lowered into a flower-strewn grave less than an bom elapsed there was no sermon of eulogy from tsu four well-known ministers who were offi ciating the nearest approach to it wa the reading by the rev dr henry van dyke of wndsworth's famous poem the happy warrior not a musical note tocal or instrumental was sounded at either service president roosevelt came from oyste bay in a special train to attend the funeral but he came as a private citizen this was likewise true of governor hughes of new york governor fort of new jersey and governor hoke smith of georgia seeie tary cortelyou and secretary oscar strauss attended as friends family shows courage perhaps the most remarkable feature of ihe services was the remarkable fortitude and composure shown by mrs cleveland esther his fourteen-year-old daughter and little richard aged ten not a tear came to any of them through the trying double service it is said the children learned their les son at their mother's knee this morning when she told theiu they must remember their father would not have them cry during the ceremony at the grave she he'd dick by the hand and he was a soldier to the last moment president roosevelt showed more out ward signs of grief than most of those who attended the funeral his face was a study in wrinkled seriousness clergyman is overcome the rev van dyke who lives across the street from the cleveland home and who has been much with the ex-presidcni of late years was so affected that he al most lost control of his voice during the service at the house several companies of new jersey militia cavalry and infantry were on hand to do guard duty the crowd of curiosity seek ers was not as large as was expected and the guards found little to do they had no part in the funeral ceremonies as mis cleveland would not consent to a military funeral men of prominence who had been invited to the funeral began to arrive at 2 o'clock john o carlisle e c benedict and mi and mrs oscar strauss were driven at once to the house members of mr cleve land's former cabinets were taken to the home of bayard stockton a trustee of princeton university among them were william f vilas governor hoke smith and hilary a herbert and they were k joined later by john g carlisle 1 at 3:80 the former president's body was â– brought from the upper floor bedroom to â– the reception room the four clergymen h whom mrs cleveland had asked to assist to the house in their academic robes shortly before 7 resident roosevelt arrives jh^ftrsident roosevelt and secretary loeb ty governor fort drove up a few b^bents h president and his party took scats first Chicago sheath gown and its wearer Chicago society women in sheath gowns cause horse show sensation mrs j a carpenter and mrs trudeau have eadyguaid which baffles too curious spectators u -. john alden carjietitir and mrs hazel mart trriaeau appeared in sheath gowns yesterday afternoon at the lake forest open air horse show and during the time they were on the grounds all other interests were eclipsed the show was well on before mrs car penter and mrs trudeau came _ as ihey walked down in front of the boxes to their own loge they were the cynosure of all eyes everybody looked and wondered drew a fresh breath and gazed again there was so much of the sheath evident that society was struggling to see the slit but there wasn't any all seams were sewed tight shut still the sensation was almost as great as at the i^mgchamps race course when the directoire made its debut mrs carpenter and mrs trjjjjfcaii did not stop till the affair was over but left in about nn hour and a half their departure was perforce leisurely for friends by dozens came up to chat and view the gowns but they were flanked on all sides by friends who gallantly screened them from the view of the too curious not till they were safely tucked away in a surr.'y did their bodyguard leave triem of the two mrs carpenter's gown was the sbeathier the fabric was a shim mery silk deep mustard in hue and the dress had no trimming save several straps of the material and less than a dozen silk buttons at the jacket's waistline both front and back the gown was very long and very narrow and very clinging mrs trudeau's gown was dark slue cloth it typified the directoire as a jrac tical habit for the street drinker must wear a tin badge of courage montclair n j likely to make its topers show their mettle moxtclaiu x j june 2.l george w de chuna an architect has proposed an ordinance which if made into law will compel every drinker i'u this town to wear a metal badge fhould a liquor dealer sell to a man not thus tagged be would be rendered liable to prosecution with the revocation of the selling license as a pen alty the ordinance does not say whether the tags are to be worn as a scarf pin or a watch charm the idea presumably being to give the rearers liberty to follow their own fancies in this respect 14 clubwomen hurt as tallyho upsets in newport four of delegates to boston convention likely to die of injuries hundreds panic-stricken several victims well known in middle west visitor dies of heart disease newport k 1 june 28 four women are dying and ten are batlly injured as the result of a tallyho accident here to day all were delegates to the general federation of women's clubs in boston | half of the injured are western women the 3,000 delegates cnnlc to newport ! this morning on an excursion half of them made a steamer trip down the barber and the rest were bundled into tallybos which toured the city and then started down to easton avenue where the delft 'â– gales were to be the guests of the local i women's club at a dinner the tallybos ; were going rapidly when suddenly the ; front wheels of one of them collapsed the big vehicle slowly careened and as the shrieks of the panic-stricken occupants '. were ringing in the air came crashing to ' the ground mis henry wynn wife of the mayor of maiden mass was pinned under the rnil 'â– ing both of her legs fcrere lirokeu one arm was torn from its socket and her spine was injured she was not expected to live mi til morning mrs agnes morgan of kansas city mo miss helen c sundine of lincoln neb and mrs edwin hays of lowa were crushed nnd mangled and the physicians hold out but little hope for their recovery < heleu l longworth of cincinnati mrs joseph h luther of indianapolis and eight others escaped with sprains and bruises the hundreds of clubwomen in the other fifty tally-hos became panic-stricken when they saw the accident and ran screaming and crying in every direction i'm a time it looked as though all four teen of the women had been killed there was hardly one that was not nnconscÃŸms there was a hurry call for doctors and am bulances and all of the injured were taken to the newport hospital wheiv t':iÂ»ii wounds were dressed and six of them were taken to boston in a hospital car to-night's session of the convention was cancelled mrs sarah shute of coon rapids lown died to-dÂ»y of heart trouble with her daughter miss sarah shute she was a passenger on a steamer from providence with the delegates who came this morning as the journey enued mrs shute was taken very ill and was conveyed to the newnjjjfl hospital where she died in a short time m'kinley's bodyguard victim of paralysis albert gallaher who disarmed as sassin ml at grand pacific albert gallaher for more than twenty years connected with the united states secret service bureau is at the grand pacific hotel crippled by paralysis he is being taken from st paul mine where he had charge of the secret service bureau to the home of bis wife's relatives at bloomlngton ind when former president mckiuley was shot at buffalo gallaher who was one of his bodyguards was the first to seize the assailant and disarm him he has acted as bodyguard to many other prominent government officials he received a watch from the russian ambassador during the knssian-japanese peace conference at portsmouth mass where he was assigned as one of the bodyguards ward admits intent to defeat museum project declares he understood grant park was to be unobstructed . a montgomery ward filed his answer yesterday to the amended cross bill of the south park commissioners in the suit lie gun by him to prevent the completion of the field museum of natural history lie admits that it is bis purpose to prevent the erection of any buildings including the 8,000,000 museum he sets forth that when he purchased lots abutting lake park which now is grant talk be relied on the litograpbed plates exhibited by the canal trustees in which appeared the words public ground a common to re main forever open clear and free from anv buildings or any obstruction whatever harriman home saved by servants stable and garage burned family at college boat race lord gentry blooded horse killed loss is 40,000 new york june __!(;â€” k 11 llaiiinian's stable and garage together with several other outbuildings at his country estate near allien n v were totally destroyed j by fire early this morning the harriman â€¢ residence was in danger several times bur ] was saved by a bucket brigade made up of j the servants on the estate one blooded horse lord gentry was burned to death nnd several carriages were destroyed the fire originated in the stable and is supposed to have been cause by a defective electric wire none of the harriman family were at home all having gone to new london to attend the harvard-yale bont race the loss is estimated at 40,000 persian student enters university of Chicago says recent trouble in his country is due to french ideas a young persian student has just entered the vniversity of Chicago his name is mirza siniorc muzcitarrnffie and he comes from kasban persia he is studying forms of government and p rap oses to carry his knowledge back to bis peopie the trouble in persia now be ex plained yesterday is due to the ideas brought home from france by a number of students sent there some fifteen years ago i nn myself neutral in these matters but i think my being a graduate of an amer ican university will help me when i return home muzaftarraffie was private secretary last summer to tie persian ambassador he is about twenty-live yours old and is also studying medicine iu connection with bis governmental pursuits he owns a hand some residence at kashan which is about 10j miles from the capital professor will live 90days en monkey house wants to prepare the first orang outang dictionary ney york june i'g for tp e next three months all cotnuiunieations for professor melvln e haggeity of harvard l'niversuy should be addressed : care of monkey honeej bronx zoological i'ark beginning to-morrow professor i!:'ggerty will start light housekeeping in ihe neat but inex pensive qasr.i "â€¢â– ilia l-tiÂ«l*'fh prepared for him in the simian shed by uire'tor hornaday after ninety days close ')"Â»"-,, elation with the jungle exiles professor ilaggcrty expects to qualify as an inter preter of their language with the lata secured it is the purpose of professors yerkes and ilaggcrty to compile an ourang ontang dictionary which will be the first lexicon of the kind ever built 100 college girls have wading party in lake lark of sorority delegates occurs on northwestern beach one hundred young women in attendance at the national convention of the chi omega sorority at the Chicago bench hotel were the guests of misses ethel switzer eieanor lewis and catherine zook at northwestern university yesterday aft ernoon the young women went to inspect the university and hold a beach party the feature of the afternoon however was not the luncheon nor the songs that followed but a wading lark indulged in by the vis itors it was a sight said a spectator to sec all those girls creep down the lake shore and step nimbly into the water only to give a loud scream and make for laud again shah besieges british legation to get refugee cossacks surround fremises despite demand for their withdraw berlin june 2g a dispatch to the i.okal anzeiger from teheran says the shah to-day sunor.nded the british lega tion with cossacks in order to force the surrender of a member of a persian par liament from tabriz whom the shah was very desirous of seizing nnd wbo took refuge in tbc legation hie cossacks liy order of the shah stopped every one who left the premises the legation protested against this proceeding as an unheard cf insult and has demanded that the cossack be withdrawn by g o'clock this evening three men in a boat one is shot by boy youths throw stones and then shoot at occupants of craft paul fisher 1369 sheffield avenue was shot iu the left shoulder last night wbiie in a boat in the north branch of the chi cago elver at the anderson street bridge his assailant who is unknown escaped leo sampson 1338 sheffield avenue and . i'.n.ph kennedy 1633 grace street were i.i the boat with fisher a number of youths en the bridge were throwing stones at them a stone fell into the bont and one of tho men threw it back one of the youths then drew a revolver nnd fired fisher's wound is not serious mexican president to visit england soon london june 27 1n all pi-obaliill'.y london will bnve another ruler of a nation i a visitor in a lev weeks as is learned an invitation to visit kn>'lalul lias imcii sent by king edward to : reside it diaz of mexico also it is earned that l'resldent diaz will accept the invitation i'i.e mexican exhibition at the crystal l'al aee is the reason for president diaz's pro posed visit tu loudon by william h culver boss sullivan won't let bryan have bell for chairman committee of arrangements will consider orders from lincoln to-day all depends on dahlman jf his message from nebras kan isn't too strong they may ee good denver colo june 28 rebellion against dictation liv . lam j bryan has broken loose in the subcommittee on ar rangements for the democratic national convention mr bryan is likely to get his first jolt from the subcommittee to-mor row and if be does it will be a hard one it is in the matter of the selection of a temporary chairman for the coming con vention that the subcommittee is at outs with the dictator at lincoln and in the language of one of the members of the subcommittee who would not talk for quo tation it is a general case of too much bryan mr bryan within the last two weeks has assumed to do all the work of the con vention more than that he has assumed to do it without taking the subcommittee into bis confidence that is the cause of the revolt committee ready for fight so that committee is in a mind to bring mnlters to a definite conclusion confident that if they have to fight they have sis voles in the subcommittee against three over which the xebraskan exercises abso lute control tire selection of a temporary chairman is he first test of strength that can be made between the bryan members of the subcommittee and the so-called conserva tives the conservatives are ready for the test mr bryan lias let it reach the committee in the most roundabout way possible that be wants theodore e hell of california for the chairman the majority of the committee to-night declared tersely noth ing doing for mr kcii though admitting , bra iliey way change their minds before hferp tc is taken to-morrow afternoon lively meeting to-day the meeting to-morrow therefore is to be a mighty interesting one because it will decide whether or not there has been a surrender to mr bryan or whether the committee is to say to him that he had better take the nomination and be happy without trying to control all the affairs of the party whether the committee will give in to mr bryan depends largely upon the mess ages that james c ijahlman national committeeman from nebraska brings from lincoln when he reaches here in the morn ing mr dnblman was anxiously looked for this afternoon it is perfectly understood that he is to bring hi concrete form mr bryan's desires but he neither came nor sent word so the other members of the subcommittee are more than a bit miffed about that also bryan has 3 against 6 if mr dahlman brings it as mr bryan's desire that bell of california shall be chosen temporary chairman then bryan's desire will have just three votes in the present temper of the committee those three will be mr dahlman himself former governor john m osborne of wyoming and norman _Â£. mack of new xork against those three the other members of the committee six in number have a perfectly good working alliance boss sullivan heads the combination and he has two votes his own and the proxy of john t mcgraw of west virginia secretary trey woodson also has two his own and the proxy of clark howell of georgia chairman thomas taggart of indiana and colonel k m johnston of texas will go along with the conservatives the members of the alliance have not yet fully determined just whom they will support against the bryan candidate free i morris of Illinois boss sullivan's man will be the choice if the conservatives ret very angry and desird to show mr bryan just where lie stands but if they want to show a conciliatory spirit henry d clay tou of alabama or governor joseph k l-'olk of missouri may be chosen objections to bell the men who arc opposing the bryan policy are against bell of california for another reason thsji that he seems to be mr bryan's best choice mr bell is tie head of the order of eagles which was established a lew years ago after the order of elks had forbijlden the admission of saloon men to membership the democratic party has nothing pri marily against the liquor business or tim men who mix drinks neither have the so-called conservative bosses iu the sub committee on arrangements snd that is especially true of sullivan and taggart but they figure that for them to allow mv bryan with his well-known temperance principles to foist upon them a man in sell's position would not only be a scan dal in the party but would submit tliem the members of the committee to charges of insincerity and slavish subserviency to the man at lincoln and while the mem bers of the sub-committee know they are little better than hired men they do not like to be told so all depends on dahlman the members,^of the subcommittee do pot know as a feet yet that mr bryan wants bell for the place they have 4 bryan wants then in denver chairs haybe boss sullivan don't medical aid needed by 60 per cent df school children dr evans inspectors report 2,389 defective pupils out of 3,963 examined more than go per cent of the pupils in chicago's schools need medical attention this statement was made yesterday by health commissioner evans as the result of tbc general examination of children made by the staff of medical examiners assigned by him to the work a few weeks ago while the percentage of defective chil dren tn this city is not as great as that iu new york the findings are not the less serious said dr evans as conditions iu Chicago are better for the health of the v-oung than in the eastern metropolis 2,389 need attention the total number of children out of the ogy examined who need the attention of physicians to cure more or less serious de fects is wj among these it is found that there are 4.446 defects some children being afflicted with more than one com plaint of those suffering from malnutrition a very small percentage were suffering from outright hunger something remarkable for a cosmopolitan city iike Chicago the result of the examination wili be that as soon as the school year begins in september another force will be sent out to make examination meantime such atten tion as can be given those who need it most will be provided the record of the examination follows 1.100 defects of teeth 807 hypertrophied tonsils 70 defects of hearing o>bc en larged glands 232 defects of palate 2ig adenoids 108 anemia 143 malnutrition 133 defects of nasal breathing 78 defective mentality 40 cardiac diseases 33 skin dis eases 2c defects of vision 18 pulmonary diseases and 14 nervous diseases making a total of 4,440 defects cardboard dustpan of widow worth 100,000 turns out to bn grant to 160 acres in st cloud minn â€¢ new yoltk june 26 alter using a section of cardboard as a dustpan for up ward of two years mrs eliza droge a widow who keeps a boarding bouse iu sev enteenth street coiiey island has made the discovery that it is worth in the neigh borhood of 10(i.(km to her and her children battered and time-wont os the cardboard is there still remains legible upon it what she has found to lie a government grant to iho acres of land in the now flourishing and populous city of st cloud minn to-day she announced that through at torney andrew j smith she would press her claim to the property which mr smith believes to be indisputable the deed it self shows that the grant bad originally been made to santos gnanlco a soldier in the mexican war unknown decrees of highest Illinois trf bunals regarded as guesses says b f herrington appellate syste#3oke : ' decisions ' contradict taarv other he tells iiiinois bar association roosevelt is satirized ex - congressman littlefield says army of anti-trust lawyefrs did little r 4 to the astonishment of me mem bers of the Illinois bar asso ciation the oldest member of the organization benjamin f her rington of yorkville yesterday went even further than chief justice jesse holdom ot the appellate court in ex posing the delinquencies of the judges of the state ff holdom had made astounding charges of misconduct apparently aimed at judges of the superior and circuit courts in cook county her rington carried the matter up to he higher judiciary exposing the judges of the appellate and supreme courts tb lawyer from the country tah_at**Â»>j the Illinois supreme court as the guess ing court and told bow the different branches of the appellate court contradict and nullify one another other features of the day's session of the association developed interest notably the speech bn the sherman anti-trust act by congressman littlefield of maine the speech held president roosevelt up to ridi cule although it was the power of the ad ministration that saved littlefield from defeat in his last campaign scores corporation lawyers the most unethical lawyer of all is the lawyer wbo aids a corporation to evade the law said elmer e rogers in a speech on legal ethics herrington was against the proposed bill to limit certiorari he said i have known the supreme court of this state for thirty years and the appellate court also the differes branches of the appellate court contradict one another every year not long ago i quoted an appellate court decision and the lawyer on the other side began reading anotber decision by the justices ot tl first district of the appellate court that virtually put me out of court it was directly the opposite of the other decision in the other district thereupon the judge remarked that the appellate justices sitting in Chicago were in the habit of deciding anything and everything iu any old way and that what-1 ever they did did not matter much \ whole thing is a joke perhaps that is right for we can al ways get the la?t guess from the supreme court of the state but even that guess isn't too good when you get it the whole thing is a joke to the supreme court of indiana and other adjacent states i have watched the supreme court for years and the judges are constantly guess ing reversing nnd contradicting themselves i don't believe the supreme court justices are ove'rworked when 1 began practicing the number of cases before the court was as large as it is now tbey hiye been consolidating getting stenographers and assistants ever since and what does it all amount to nowadays when tbey all get together the next thing we hear is that there has been a break for home and for the wives which is i suppose as it should be we get the decision when they get good and ready i have been before the supreme court iu kansas and beard the supreme court of Illinois referred to there as the guessing court that's a guess is what tuey say when an Illinois deeisio s read j in his arraignment of tn roosevelt ad-j ministration congressman lit field saiofl that the enforcement of the sherman ant'.b i trust act bad been a uutiier of p.o.lamil j tion rather than performance lie gave thm following summary of proceedings a--uinsj the trusts since koosevelt has beeu presi dent eighteen bills in equity - func tions granted ten pending i forfeited the summary of criminal cases under bis administration is as foi ttwenty-three indictments seven rnv!c tions one plea in bar tustalned ono de murrer sustained fourteen pending tfo proceedings for contempt in refusing to testify before grand jury tola 1 fi.i im posed s'.hi.ouo >*^ . u s has army of lawyejg i'jot tf h__________l *" it ice 171 district and ass'^h.^^g^^bt at torneys this little ari j^bjg^.|is ntinued on 2d page 4th column continued on 4t pape 2d column ll weather indications u jfls Chicago and vicinity gen a i erally fair saturday and probably y.j \ \ sunday rising temperature fresh jw ljj southerly winds pffl do you realiza that your summer out inffs will cost you nothing if you cut the coupons from the sunday examiner m _____________________________â– â– tm mi im^m i the most vexatious problems sm of life are often solved by the simplest processes & i solve the problem i of securing that situation by inserting a small ad in the situation wanted columns of the examiner and receive not only the largest newspaper circulation in the city of Chicago but the absolutely free services of the ffcxaminer employment exchange 70 washington st 115 fifth av Â« ' 1 get results k i yfjm is that room still unoccupied gs fil l'i it rented quick the best way is to g fv'v insert a small ad in the rooms t 9 v v i rent columns of the examine flw j3 u.tt cost is slight â€” 7j/i cents daiiy 1 0 centi jjs | sunday each insertion l^b

Chicago examiner prirf onf cent deliverc y carrier rim^e uiic v_,cim 30 cent per month saturday june 27 1908 18 pages vol vi no 162 a m cleveland interred simply poem his only eulogy no music nor csre'mony at last rites over ex-presi dent at princeton family hides its grief children follow mother's ex ample but president roose velt shows emotion poem used as eulogy the nearest approach to a eulogy at the funeral of grover cleveland was the reading of wadsworth's poem the happy warrior by dr van dyke in part as follows who is the happy voarriurf who is he who every man in arms would wish to be who doomed to go in company with pain and fear and bloodshed â€” misera ble train turns his necessity to glorious gain controls them and subdues trans mules bereaves of their bad influence and their 0uod receives bu ishv if he be called upon to face some awful moment 1o ichicii heaven has joined great issues good or bad for man kind is happy as a lover a';id through the heat of conflict keeps the law in calmness made and sees what he foresaw whom neither shape or danger can dismay ivor thought of tender happiness beiroii new york june 2d with simplicitj fitting his liunl life role of a country gentle man grover cleveland who for eight year was president of the united states wa buried at 6 o'clock this evening in an un pretentious cemetery at frincetou n j from the time services began at west land until the body was lowered into a flower-strewn grave less than an bom elapsed there was no sermon of eulogy from tsu four well-known ministers who were offi ciating the nearest approach to it wa the reading by the rev dr henry van dyke of wndsworth's famous poem the happy warrior not a musical note tocal or instrumental was sounded at either service president roosevelt came from oyste bay in a special train to attend the funeral but he came as a private citizen this was likewise true of governor hughes of new york governor fort of new jersey and governor hoke smith of georgia seeie tary cortelyou and secretary oscar strauss attended as friends family shows courage perhaps the most remarkable feature of ihe services was the remarkable fortitude and composure shown by mrs cleveland esther his fourteen-year-old daughter and little richard aged ten not a tear came to any of them through the trying double service it is said the children learned their les son at their mother's knee this morning when she told theiu they must remember their father would not have them cry during the ceremony at the grave she he'd dick by the hand and he was a soldier to the last moment president roosevelt showed more out ward signs of grief than most of those who attended the funeral his face was a study in wrinkled seriousness clergyman is overcome the rev van dyke who lives across the street from the cleveland home and who has been much with the ex-presidcni of late years was so affected that he al most lost control of his voice during the service at the house several companies of new jersey militia cavalry and infantry were on hand to do guard duty the crowd of curiosity seek ers was not as large as was expected and the guards found little to do they had no part in the funeral ceremonies as mis cleveland would not consent to a military funeral men of prominence who had been invited to the funeral began to arrive at 2 o'clock john o carlisle e c benedict and mi and mrs oscar strauss were driven at once to the house members of mr cleve land's former cabinets were taken to the home of bayard stockton a trustee of princeton university among them were william f vilas governor hoke smith and hilary a herbert and they were k joined later by john g carlisle 1 at 3:80 the former president's body was â– brought from the upper floor bedroom to â– the reception room the four clergymen h whom mrs cleveland had asked to assist to the house in their academic robes shortly before 7 resident roosevelt arrives jh^ftrsident roosevelt and secretary loeb ty governor fort drove up a few b^bents h president and his party took scats first Chicago sheath gown and its wearer Chicago society women in sheath gowns cause horse show sensation mrs j a carpenter and mrs trudeau have eadyguaid which baffles too curious spectators u -. john alden carjietitir and mrs hazel mart trriaeau appeared in sheath gowns yesterday afternoon at the lake forest open air horse show and during the time they were on the grounds all other interests were eclipsed the show was well on before mrs car penter and mrs trudeau came _ as ihey walked down in front of the boxes to their own loge they were the cynosure of all eyes everybody looked and wondered drew a fresh breath and gazed again there was so much of the sheath evident that society was struggling to see the slit but there wasn't any all seams were sewed tight shut still the sensation was almost as great as at the i^mgchamps race course when the directoire made its debut mrs carpenter and mrs trjjjjfcaii did not stop till the affair was over but left in about nn hour and a half their departure was perforce leisurely for friends by dozens came up to chat and view the gowns but they were flanked on all sides by friends who gallantly screened them from the view of the too curious not till they were safely tucked away in a surr.'y did their bodyguard leave triem of the two mrs carpenter's gown was the sbeathier the fabric was a shim mery silk deep mustard in hue and the dress had no trimming save several straps of the material and less than a dozen silk buttons at the jacket's waistline both front and back the gown was very long and very narrow and very clinging mrs trudeau's gown was dark slue cloth it typified the directoire as a jrac tical habit for the street drinker must wear a tin badge of courage montclair n j likely to make its topers show their mettle moxtclaiu x j june 2.l george w de chuna an architect has proposed an ordinance which if made into law will compel every drinker i'u this town to wear a metal badge fhould a liquor dealer sell to a man not thus tagged be would be rendered liable to prosecution with the revocation of the selling license as a pen alty the ordinance does not say whether the tags are to be worn as a scarf pin or a watch charm the idea presumably being to give the rearers liberty to follow their own fancies in this respect 14 clubwomen hurt as tallyho upsets in newport four of delegates to boston convention likely to die of injuries hundreds panic-stricken several victims well known in middle west visitor dies of heart disease newport k 1 june 28 four women are dying and ten are batlly injured as the result of a tallyho accident here to day all were delegates to the general federation of women's clubs in boston | half of the injured are western women the 3,000 delegates cnnlc to newport ! this morning on an excursion half of them made a steamer trip down the barber and the rest were bundled into tallybos which toured the city and then started down to easton avenue where the delft 'â– gales were to be the guests of the local i women's club at a dinner the tallybos ; were going rapidly when suddenly the ; front wheels of one of them collapsed the big vehicle slowly careened and as the shrieks of the panic-stricken occupants '. were ringing in the air came crashing to ' the ground mis henry wynn wife of the mayor of maiden mass was pinned under the rnil 'â– ing both of her legs fcrere lirokeu one arm was torn from its socket and her spine was injured she was not expected to live mi til morning mrs agnes morgan of kansas city mo miss helen c sundine of lincoln neb and mrs edwin hays of lowa were crushed nnd mangled and the physicians hold out but little hope for their recovery < heleu l longworth of cincinnati mrs joseph h luther of indianapolis and eight others escaped with sprains and bruises the hundreds of clubwomen in the other fifty tally-hos became panic-stricken when they saw the accident and ran screaming and crying in every direction i'm a time it looked as though all four teen of the women had been killed there was hardly one that was not nnconscÃŸms there was a hurry call for doctors and am bulances and all of the injured were taken to the newport hospital wheiv t':iÂ»ii wounds were dressed and six of them were taken to boston in a hospital car to-night's session of the convention was cancelled mrs sarah shute of coon rapids lown died to-dÂ»y of heart trouble with her daughter miss sarah shute she was a passenger on a steamer from providence with the delegates who came this morning as the journey enued mrs shute was taken very ill and was conveyed to the newnjjjfl hospital where she died in a short time m'kinley's bodyguard victim of paralysis albert gallaher who disarmed as sassin ml at grand pacific albert gallaher for more than twenty years connected with the united states secret service bureau is at the grand pacific hotel crippled by paralysis he is being taken from st paul mine where he had charge of the secret service bureau to the home of bis wife's relatives at bloomlngton ind when former president mckiuley was shot at buffalo gallaher who was one of his bodyguards was the first to seize the assailant and disarm him he has acted as bodyguard to many other prominent government officials he received a watch from the russian ambassador during the knssian-japanese peace conference at portsmouth mass where he was assigned as one of the bodyguards ward admits intent to defeat museum project declares he understood grant park was to be unobstructed . a montgomery ward filed his answer yesterday to the amended cross bill of the south park commissioners in the suit lie gun by him to prevent the completion of the field museum of natural history lie admits that it is bis purpose to prevent the erection of any buildings including the 8,000,000 museum he sets forth that when he purchased lots abutting lake park which now is grant talk be relied on the litograpbed plates exhibited by the canal trustees in which appeared the words public ground a common to re main forever open clear and free from anv buildings or any obstruction whatever harriman home saved by servants stable and garage burned family at college boat race lord gentry blooded horse killed loss is 40,000 new york june __!(;â€” k 11 llaiiinian's stable and garage together with several other outbuildings at his country estate near allien n v were totally destroyed j by fire early this morning the harriman â€¢ residence was in danger several times bur ] was saved by a bucket brigade made up of j the servants on the estate one blooded horse lord gentry was burned to death nnd several carriages were destroyed the fire originated in the stable and is supposed to have been cause by a defective electric wire none of the harriman family were at home all having gone to new london to attend the harvard-yale bont race the loss is estimated at 40,000 persian student enters university of Chicago says recent trouble in his country is due to french ideas a young persian student has just entered the vniversity of Chicago his name is mirza siniorc muzcitarrnffie and he comes from kasban persia he is studying forms of government and p rap oses to carry his knowledge back to bis peopie the trouble in persia now be ex plained yesterday is due to the ideas brought home from france by a number of students sent there some fifteen years ago i nn myself neutral in these matters but i think my being a graduate of an amer ican university will help me when i return home muzaftarraffie was private secretary last summer to tie persian ambassador he is about twenty-live yours old and is also studying medicine iu connection with bis governmental pursuits he owns a hand some residence at kashan which is about 10j miles from the capital professor will live 90days en monkey house wants to prepare the first orang outang dictionary ney york june i'g for tp e next three months all cotnuiunieations for professor melvln e haggeity of harvard l'niversuy should be addressed : care of monkey honeej bronx zoological i'ark beginning to-morrow professor i!:'ggerty will start light housekeeping in ihe neat but inex pensive qasr.i "â€¢â– ilia l-tiÂ«l*'fh prepared for him in the simian shed by uire'tor hornaday after ninety days close ')"Â»"-,, elation with the jungle exiles professor ilaggcrty expects to qualify as an inter preter of their language with the lata secured it is the purpose of professors yerkes and ilaggcrty to compile an ourang ontang dictionary which will be the first lexicon of the kind ever built 100 college girls have wading party in lake lark of sorority delegates occurs on northwestern beach one hundred young women in attendance at the national convention of the chi omega sorority at the Chicago bench hotel were the guests of misses ethel switzer eieanor lewis and catherine zook at northwestern university yesterday aft ernoon the young women went to inspect the university and hold a beach party the feature of the afternoon however was not the luncheon nor the songs that followed but a wading lark indulged in by the vis itors it was a sight said a spectator to sec all those girls creep down the lake shore and step nimbly into the water only to give a loud scream and make for laud again shah besieges british legation to get refugee cossacks surround fremises despite demand for their withdraw berlin june 2g a dispatch to the i.okal anzeiger from teheran says the shah to-day sunor.nded the british lega tion with cossacks in order to force the surrender of a member of a persian par liament from tabriz whom the shah was very desirous of seizing nnd wbo took refuge in tbc legation hie cossacks liy order of the shah stopped every one who left the premises the legation protested against this proceeding as an unheard cf insult and has demanded that the cossack be withdrawn by g o'clock this evening three men in a boat one is shot by boy youths throw stones and then shoot at occupants of craft paul fisher 1369 sheffield avenue was shot iu the left shoulder last night wbiie in a boat in the north branch of the chi cago elver at the anderson street bridge his assailant who is unknown escaped leo sampson 1338 sheffield avenue and . i'.n.ph kennedy 1633 grace street were i.i the boat with fisher a number of youths en the bridge were throwing stones at them a stone fell into the bont and one of tho men threw it back one of the youths then drew a revolver nnd fired fisher's wound is not serious mexican president to visit england soon london june 27 1n all pi-obaliill'.y london will bnve another ruler of a nation i a visitor in a lev weeks as is learned an invitation to visit kn>'lalul lias imcii sent by king edward to : reside it diaz of mexico also it is earned that l'resldent diaz will accept the invitation i'i.e mexican exhibition at the crystal l'al aee is the reason for president diaz's pro posed visit tu loudon by william h culver boss sullivan won't let bryan have bell for chairman committee of arrangements will consider orders from lincoln to-day all depends on dahlman jf his message from nebras kan isn't too strong they may ee good denver colo june 28 rebellion against dictation liv . lam j bryan has broken loose in the subcommittee on ar rangements for the democratic national convention mr bryan is likely to get his first jolt from the subcommittee to-mor row and if be does it will be a hard one it is in the matter of the selection of a temporary chairman for the coming con vention that the subcommittee is at outs with the dictator at lincoln and in the language of one of the members of the subcommittee who would not talk for quo tation it is a general case of too much bryan mr bryan within the last two weeks has assumed to do all the work of the con vention more than that he has assumed to do it without taking the subcommittee into bis confidence that is the cause of the revolt committee ready for fight so that committee is in a mind to bring mnlters to a definite conclusion confident that if they have to fight they have sis voles in the subcommittee against three over which the xebraskan exercises abso lute control tire selection of a temporary chairman is he first test of strength that can be made between the bryan members of the subcommittee and the so-called conserva tives the conservatives are ready for the test mr bryan lias let it reach the committee in the most roundabout way possible that be wants theodore e hell of california for the chairman the majority of the committee to-night declared tersely noth ing doing for mr kcii though admitting , bra iliey way change their minds before hferp tc is taken to-morrow afternoon lively meeting to-day the meeting to-morrow therefore is to be a mighty interesting one because it will decide whether or not there has been a surrender to mr bryan or whether the committee is to say to him that he had better take the nomination and be happy without trying to control all the affairs of the party whether the committee will give in to mr bryan depends largely upon the mess ages that james c ijahlman national committeeman from nebraska brings from lincoln when he reaches here in the morn ing mr dnblman was anxiously looked for this afternoon it is perfectly understood that he is to bring hi concrete form mr bryan's desires but he neither came nor sent word so the other members of the subcommittee are more than a bit miffed about that also bryan has 3 against 6 if mr dahlman brings it as mr bryan's desire that bell of california shall be chosen temporary chairman then bryan's desire will have just three votes in the present temper of the committee those three will be mr dahlman himself former governor john m osborne of wyoming and norman _Â£. mack of new xork against those three the other members of the committee six in number have a perfectly good working alliance boss sullivan heads the combination and he has two votes his own and the proxy of john t mcgraw of west virginia secretary trey woodson also has two his own and the proxy of clark howell of georgia chairman thomas taggart of indiana and colonel k m johnston of texas will go along with the conservatives the members of the alliance have not yet fully determined just whom they will support against the bryan candidate free i morris of Illinois boss sullivan's man will be the choice if the conservatives ret very angry and desird to show mr bryan just where lie stands but if they want to show a conciliatory spirit henry d clay tou of alabama or governor joseph k l-'olk of missouri may be chosen objections to bell the men who arc opposing the bryan policy are against bell of california for another reason thsji that he seems to be mr bryan's best choice mr bell is tie head of the order of eagles which was established a lew years ago after the order of elks had forbijlden the admission of saloon men to membership the democratic party has nothing pri marily against the liquor business or tim men who mix drinks neither have the so-called conservative bosses iu the sub committee on arrangements snd that is especially true of sullivan and taggart but they figure that for them to allow mv bryan with his well-known temperance principles to foist upon them a man in sell's position would not only be a scan dal in the party but would submit tliem the members of the committee to charges of insincerity and slavish subserviency to the man at lincoln and while the mem bers of the sub-committee know they are little better than hired men they do not like to be told so all depends on dahlman the members,^of the subcommittee do pot know as a feet yet that mr bryan wants bell for the place they have 4 bryan wants then in denver chairs haybe boss sullivan don't medical aid needed by 60 per cent df school children dr evans inspectors report 2,389 defective pupils out of 3,963 examined more than go per cent of the pupils in chicago's schools need medical attention this statement was made yesterday by health commissioner evans as the result of tbc general examination of children made by the staff of medical examiners assigned by him to the work a few weeks ago while the percentage of defective chil dren tn this city is not as great as that iu new york the findings are not the less serious said dr evans as conditions iu Chicago are better for the health of the v-oung than in the eastern metropolis 2,389 need attention the total number of children out of the ogy examined who need the attention of physicians to cure more or less serious de fects is wj among these it is found that there are 4.446 defects some children being afflicted with more than one com plaint of those suffering from malnutrition a very small percentage were suffering from outright hunger something remarkable for a cosmopolitan city iike Chicago the result of the examination wili be that as soon as the school year begins in september another force will be sent out to make examination meantime such atten tion as can be given those who need it most will be provided the record of the examination follows 1.100 defects of teeth 807 hypertrophied tonsils 70 defects of hearing o>bc en larged glands 232 defects of palate 2ig adenoids 108 anemia 143 malnutrition 133 defects of nasal breathing 78 defective mentality 40 cardiac diseases 33 skin dis eases 2c defects of vision 18 pulmonary diseases and 14 nervous diseases making a total of 4,440 defects cardboard dustpan of widow worth 100,000 turns out to bn grant to 160 acres in st cloud minn â€¢ new yoltk june 26 alter using a section of cardboard as a dustpan for up ward of two years mrs eliza droge a widow who keeps a boarding bouse iu sev enteenth street coiiey island has made the discovery that it is worth in the neigh borhood of 10(i.(km to her and her children battered and time-wont os the cardboard is there still remains legible upon it what she has found to lie a government grant to iho acres of land in the now flourishing and populous city of st cloud minn to-day she announced that through at torney andrew j smith she would press her claim to the property which mr smith believes to be indisputable the deed it self shows that the grant bad originally been made to santos gnanlco a soldier in the mexican war unknown decrees of highest Illinois trf bunals regarded as guesses says b f herrington appellate syste#3oke : ' decisions ' contradict taarv other he tells iiiinois bar association roosevelt is satirized ex - congressman littlefield says army of anti-trust lawyefrs did little r 4 to the astonishment of me mem bers of the Illinois bar asso ciation the oldest member of the organization benjamin f her rington of yorkville yesterday went even further than chief justice jesse holdom ot the appellate court in ex posing the delinquencies of the judges of the state ff holdom had made astounding charges of misconduct apparently aimed at judges of the superior and circuit courts in cook county her rington carried the matter up to he higher judiciary exposing the judges of the appellate and supreme courts tb lawyer from the country tah_at**Â»>j the Illinois supreme court as the guess ing court and told bow the different branches of the appellate court contradict and nullify one another other features of the day's session of the association developed interest notably the speech bn the sherman anti-trust act by congressman littlefield of maine the speech held president roosevelt up to ridi cule although it was the power of the ad ministration that saved littlefield from defeat in his last campaign scores corporation lawyers the most unethical lawyer of all is the lawyer wbo aids a corporation to evade the law said elmer e rogers in a speech on legal ethics herrington was against the proposed bill to limit certiorari he said i have known the supreme court of this state for thirty years and the appellate court also the differes branches of the appellate court contradict one another every year not long ago i quoted an appellate court decision and the lawyer on the other side began reading anotber decision by the justices ot tl first district of the appellate court that virtually put me out of court it was directly the opposite of the other decision in the other district thereupon the judge remarked that the appellate justices sitting in Chicago were in the habit of deciding anything and everything iu any old way and that what-1 ever they did did not matter much \ whole thing is a joke perhaps that is right for we can al ways get the la?t guess from the supreme court of the state but even that guess isn't too good when you get it the whole thing is a joke to the supreme court of indiana and other adjacent states i have watched the supreme court for years and the judges are constantly guess ing reversing nnd contradicting themselves i don't believe the supreme court justices are ove'rworked when 1 began practicing the number of cases before the court was as large as it is now tbey hiye been consolidating getting stenographers and assistants ever since and what does it all amount to nowadays when tbey all get together the next thing we hear is that there has been a break for home and for the wives which is i suppose as it should be we get the decision when they get good and ready i have been before the supreme court iu kansas and beard the supreme court of Illinois referred to there as the guessing court that's a guess is what tuey say when an Illinois deeisio s read j in his arraignment of tn roosevelt ad-j ministration congressman lit field saiofl that the enforcement of the sherman ant'.b i trust act bad been a uutiier of p.o.lamil j tion rather than performance lie gave thm following summary of proceedings a--uinsj the trusts since koosevelt has beeu presi dent eighteen bills in equity - func tions granted ten pending i forfeited the summary of criminal cases under bis administration is as foi ttwenty-three indictments seven rnv!c tions one plea in bar tustalned ono de murrer sustained fourteen pending tfo proceedings for contempt in refusing to testify before grand jury tola 1 fi.i im posed s'.hi.ouo >*^ . u s has army of lawyejg i'jot tf h__________l *" it ice 171 district and ass'^h.^^g^^bt at torneys this little ari j^bjg^.|is ntinued on 2d page 4th column continued on 4t pape 2d column ll weather indications u jfls Chicago and vicinity gen a i erally fair saturday and probably y.j \ \ sunday rising temperature fresh jw ljj southerly winds pffl do you realiza that your summer out inffs will cost you nothing if you cut the coupons from the sunday examiner m _____________________________â– â– tm mi im^m i the most vexatious problems sm of life are often solved by the simplest processes & i solve the problem i of securing that situation by inserting a small ad in the situation wanted columns of the examiner and receive not only the largest newspaper circulation in the city of Chicago but the absolutely free services of the ffcxaminer employment exchange 70 washington st 115 fifth av Â« ' 1 get results k i yfjm is that room still unoccupied gs fil l'i it rented quick the best way is to g fv'v insert a small ad in the rooms t 9 v v i rent columns of the examine flw j3 u.tt cost is slight â€” 7j/i cents daiiy 1 0 centi jjs | sunday each insertion l^b